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Bekah Brunstetter chats with TDF

January 24, 2017 John Racioppo
Emily Louise Perkins and Liba Vaynberg in The Oregon Trail. Photo by Jeremy Daniel.

Emily Louise Perkins and Liba Vaynberg in The Oregon Trail. Photo by Jeremy Daniel.

Bekah Brunstetter chatted with TDF Stages about sadness, survival, and The Oregon Trail. A limited number of tickets each night are available at a 50% discount to TDF Members. You can find out more over at www.tdf.org.

Life Is Hard, But At Least You're Not a Pioneer

By Josh Austin

A new play blends covered wagons and modern technology

You've named your travel companions, chosen an occupation, and sensibly spent $400 at the general store on oxen, food, ammunition, and winter clothing. You set off west from Independence, Missouri, ready for an adventure. And then – whoops – you get a message on your screen that says you've died of dysentery. So it goes in The Oregon Trail.

Anyone who had a computer in the 80s or 90s is likely to remember this particular game, where players tried to get a group of settlers safely across the country in 1848. Half the fun – and more than half the point – came from the difficulty in completing the journey. No matter how much you prepared, the game insisted, life was always going to be hard.

That theme has transferred from the monitor to the stage in Bekah Brunstetter's new play, also called The Oregon Trail. Presented by the Fault Line Theatre and now in performances at the WP Theater until February 12, it juxtaposes pioneer life with the modern day.

"At the time when I started really working on this [script], I was seeing, in my peer group, a lot of sadness," Brunstetter says. "This feeling of listlessness and a sense of feeling lost and not quite knowing we're on the earth and what our function is, which of course is a common thing in your twenties. The play is about where that feeling comes from and how we deal with it and how that has changed between 1848 and now."

Within the show, the audience meets two Janes. There's Then Jane (played by Emily Louise Perkins), who is travelling the trail, covered wagon and all, alongside her family. There's also Jane (Liba Vaynberg), a contemporary teenager. When we meet them, both girls are unhappy with their lot in life, struggling to understand their place, and dealing with their own sadness and frustration. 

Liba Vaynberg in The Oregon Trail. Photo by Jeremy Daniel. 

Liba Vaynberg in The Oregon Trail. Photo by Jeremy Daniel. 

Even as present-day Jane enters her mid-20s, the perils both women face, however different, leave them in similar emotional states. Then Jane battles the frontier, while Jane finds herself unemployed and trying to get a handle on her depression.

"I thought it would be interesting to compare feeling that way now versus feeling that way on the Oregon Trail," the playwright says. "If you're on the trail with your family, where every day is a fight to survive, you can't say that you don't want to get out of the wagon in the morning. You kind of have to." 

One scene in particular underscores the emotional intersections between the characters. Jane, nestled under a mound of blankets in an air-conditioned apartment, has been lying around binge-watching some show (probably Planet Earth or America's Next Top Model, according to Brunstetter). After six hours, she's feeling unfulfilled, uninspired, lazy, and sad. All of the emotions, Brunstetter notes, one often feels after lying around for half a day. (There's even a study that suggests binge watching is bad for your mental state.) Meanwhile, Then Jane has been tasked with starting a fire so that her family can eat breakfast. Unable to light the fire, she feels useless and discouraged.

"They're both frustrated," Brunstetter says. "The scope of their individual frustration cannot be more different: 'I need to light this fire so that my family can eat' versus 'I don't know what to do with this moment of my life that's been gifted to me.' My goal is to compare those two."

However, it is not Brunstetter's wish to cast judgement on either one of the women, particularly present-day Jane, whose situation is obviously less dire. "Though we're not necessarily hunting for our food and lighting fires for it, there's still a place for sadness because we're human beings," she says. "And even though our lives are easier, it's going to be a part of the experience."

After all, the playwright adds, it's our ancestors—including the ones who've trekked the trail—that have allowed us access to an easier life. If we remember that as we play the game, the journey can be much more satisfying.

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Tags The Oregon Trail, Press

Village Voice Review

January 23, 2017 John Racioppo
Emily Louise Perkins and Liba Vaynberg as, respectively, 1848 and 1997 Jane. Photo by Jeremy Daniel

Emily Louise Perkins and Liba Vaynberg as, respectively, 1848 and 1997 Jane. Photo by Jeremy Daniel

Did you catch the review in The Village Voice of Bekah Brunstetter's The Oregon Trail today? If you missed it, we've got you covered! Check it out below:

Fault Line Theatre's 'Oregon Trail' Tracks Sadness Across Centuries

By: Nicole Serratore

Like the classic computer game The Oregon Trail, life is full of unpleasant surprises: There are rivers to forge, diseased to battle, bad decisions to regret, and dead ends to find our way out of. Bekah Brunstetter’s touching dramedy of the same title, now playing at Fault Line Theatre, uses the game as a device to ask how we keep pressing forward in the face of life’s many obstacles.

The play shifts between the 1848 pioneer world of the game and the real world, ca. 1997. We meet “Now Jane” (Liba Vaynberg), an aimless teen besotted with the clueless Billy (Juan Arturo), plagued by an indescribable sadness, and obsessed with the titular game.

Meanwhile, in 1848, “Then Jane” (Emily Louise Perkins) shares something akin to Now Jane’s depression: After the loss of her mother, she faces the arduous journey of a wagon trail from Missouri to Oregon with her father (Jimmy King) and older sister, Mary Anne (Laura Ramadei).

Oscillating between each Jane and Mary Anne’s struggle to “be a person in the world,” Brunstetter explores how depression is carried in these women’s bodies and how they articulate that sorrow in their respective eras. Their shared despondence resonates at times, though in this production, the 1800’s segments never feel as sharply drawn as the contemporary scenes.

Now Jane finds herself, as an adult, unemployed, living Mary Anne’s den, still directionless, and maybe still pining for her junior high crush. The Omnipotent Voice of The Oregon Trail (Craig Wesley Divino), heard but not seen, serves as a sometimes helpful (but more often frustrating) guide for Now Jane, offering her options to proceed in the the vernacular of The Oregon Trail; “You have a broken spirit. How would you like to fix it?” When she is dissatisfied with the options, she shouts “Control-Alt-Delete” at him, but her life isn’t a game; it continues, without a reset, never turning out like she wants.

But despite the darker themes, Brunstetter peppers the play with ample humor. Her strength is in the quippy dialogue and the focus on the winsome Now Jane, which Vaynberg painfully and accurately captures, particularly the teenage awkwardness of being uncomfortable in your own body. Even as she grows into an adult, her constant shuffling and slouching bears this mark. In one moment when things finally seem to be going her away, she casts off the gray and beams. It’s subtle work and Vaynberg navigates it well. Ramadei shows similar range and flexibility with her two Mary Annes: the pioneer version bounds across the stage with forced perkiness and delusional optimism, but Ramadei shades modern Mary Anne with a darker motivation.

When the play clicks its engaging, but that fascination can ebb and flow, and the themes tend to circle the wagon (sometimes literally) without gaining depth. But there is a sincerity and warmth to these young women, who display strength in their survival of the game of life.

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Tags The Oregon Trail

The Oregon Trail in the New York Times

January 22, 2017 John Racioppo
From left, Emily Louise Perkins, Liba Vaynberg and Laura Ramadei. Photo by Sara Krulwich/The New York Time

From left, Emily Louise Perkins, Liba Vaynberg and Laura Ramadei. Photo by Sara Krulwich/The New York Time

Check out what The New York Times thought about our production of Bekah Brunstetter's The Oregon Trail.

‘The Oregon Trail’ Traverses Tough Terrain in Two Different Eras

By: Alexis Soloski

Being a teenage girl is the worst! The unrequited crushes, the cascading hormones, the constant threat of cholera. In Bekah Brunstetter’s “The Oregon Trail,” produced by Fault Line Theater, Jane (Liba Vaynberg), a 13-year-old in the 1990s, is playing the titular game — a wildly popular piece of edutainment software that taught a generation of kids about pioneer life — in her school’s computer lab.

Meanwhile, a century and a half earlier, another Jane (Emily Louise Perkins) prepares to traverse the country in a covered wagon. Both Janes are self-involved, a little whiny and burdened with a goody-goody big sister (Laura Ramadei). Only one of them has to worry about whether or not her team of oxen can ford the river.

The play, directed by Geordie Broadwater, is a feisty, formally inventive comedy. As Jane plays the game, the computer voice presents her with increasingly personal choices. Would she like to begin her journey in March, April or May? — “when the sun starts to smolder and your bangs stick to your face no matter what you do, and you are disgusting.”

Ms. Brunstetter, a writer for the NBC show “This Is Us,” has scripted earlier plays — “Be a Good Little Widow,”“Oohrah!”— that include characters who seem to act not according to their own whims and desires, but to set up the next joke. As a consequence the work has felt stilted and sometimes precious.

“The Oregon Trail” is a great improvement, particularly in its nifty first half-hour. In Ms. Vaynberg’s expressive hands, contemporary Jane’s sly humor and cringing embarrassment feel wonderfully real and raw, horrible and funny, as in her woeful description of the onset of menarche: “It’s like when your body starts to tell you the truth about your life.” Her encounter with Billy (Juan Arturo), a sweaty devil-may-care soccer player, is a wincing delight.

After that, the play makes a forward leap to Jane’s thwarted adulthood and becomes a more formulaic piece about whether it’s O.K. to indulge in suffering when you haven’t actually suffered anything. The parallels between pioneer days and the present become more pointed, and the language Ms. Brunstetter uses in the 1840s scenes, which is neither period-appropriate nor playfully anachronistic, starts to irk, as do the sorrows of present-day Jane, who should have been packed off to a therapist years ago.

“I watch too much TV,” this Jane complains. “Nothing is fair.” Well, at least she doesn’t have to worry if she’ll have enough venison to make it through the winter.

View Original Article

Tags The Oregon Trail, Press

What We're Seeing: DANNYKRISDONNAVERONICA

January 6, 2017 John Racioppo
DANNYFAULT.jpg

As we head into tech for our New York premiere of Bekah Brunstetter's The Oregon Trail, we want to wish our friends at the Wheelhouse Theater Company a very happy opening tonight as they begin their run of DANNYKRISDONNAVERONICA at the 4th Street Theatre downtown. Do not miss this show! You may even notice our ol' pal Ben Mehl from our production of At The Table a year and a half ago.

January 7-28, 2017
4th Street Theater
83 East 4th Street
New York, NY 10003

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A Little About The Show

In a bucolic Brooklyn park Kris and Danny meet for their children's first play date. While commiserating, a precarious emotional relationship forms between them, but when one of their children is inexplicably injured, the sequential fall-out incites their spouses, Donna and Veronica, along a self-destructive path in search of the superfluous truth. DANNYKRISDONNAVERONICA is an offbeat meditation on the confounding business of contemporary parenthood.

Cast:

  • Suzy Jane Hunt
  • Ben Mehl
  • Rachel Mewbron
  • Liz Wisan

Creative:

  • Directed by Jeff Wise
  • Written by Lawrence Dial
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The Oregon Trail in Rehearsal - Week 2

January 3, 2017 John Racioppo

Happy New Years! After a couple days off for Christmas, the second week of rehearsal for Bekah Brunstetter's The Oregon Trail sped onwards. Taking a look back this week, Geordie talks to co-artistic director Aaron Rossini about the challenges in staging a play that pulls inspiration from a video game.

Also...

Tickets are now on sale! You can grab them over here. All preview performances are only $9!

Tags The Oregon Trail

The Oregon Trail in Rehearsal - Week 1

December 23, 2016 John Racioppo

The first week of rehearsal for Bekah Brunstetter's The Oregon Trail has come to an end.

We sat down with director Geordie Broadwater to find out exactly what The Oregon Trail is all about.

For regular behind the scenes updates, be sure to follow us on Instagram!

Tags The Oregon Trail

'A Face in the Clouds" workshop

December 16, 2016 John Racioppo

This past Wednesday we sat down at ART/NY's Brooklyn rehearsal studio and worked through a new play by Kareem Fahmy. Led by co-artistic director Aaron Rossini and featuring the talents of Charles Socarides, Kathryn Kates, RJ Brown, Philippe Bowgen, Marianna McClellan and our own John Racioppo, we had a great afternoon reading over the play and discussing the script.

We can't wait to see what direction Kareem takes this new play! 

Kicking off the 2017 Season

December 12, 2016 John Racioppo
Kyp Malone of TV on the Radio

Kyp Malone of TV on the Radio

In just under one week, we begin rehearsals for our New York Premiere of Bekah Brunstetter's The Oregon Trail. In the meantime, this past weekend, we celebrated the kick-off of our 2017 season in style with friends, family, collaborators, and supporters.

With live music from the incredible Kyp Malone (of TV on the Radio), Big Data spinning tunes, and a vintage video game cabinet featuring the classic Oregon Trail, the celebration went late into the evening.

Thank you so much to everyone who came out and made the night an incredible success!

What We're Seeing: Wake Up Call

December 8, 2016 John Racioppo

The holiday season is officially upon us! It's time to check out timeless classics of American theatre like A Christmas Carol or The Rockettes at Radio City Music Hall. Allow us to add more holiday season play to your list: Wake Up Call. Our very own John Racioppo will be starring in this show about hotels, immaturity, and pet fish.

December 9 - 18, 2016
IRT Theater
154 Christopher St 3B (3rd Floor)
New York, NY 10014

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A LITTLE ABOUT THE PLAY

In the midst of an unexpected double shift (on Christmas Eve, no less) a group of degenerate hotel employees stumble their way through an unusual night of service. It’s a “coming of age when you’re already of age” story. Sometimes it takes a miracle to grow the hell up. Wake Up Call s an 90 minute contemporary play set in the lobby of a luxury boutique hotel in New York City. In the respect that hotels are transitional places for the guests, the same is true for the people that work there. Navigating through the misadventures of the evening, from outlandish guests to unpredictable coworkers, we follow their journey into adulthood. Sort of.

Cast:

  • Veronica Cooper
  • Chris Gebauer
  • Jory Murphy
  • John Racioppo
  • Brian Reilly
  • Jennifer Teska

Creative:

  • Directed by Adam Thomas Smith
  • Written by Adam Thomas Smith and Veronica Cooper
Tags What We're Seeing

'Summer' Workshop

December 3, 2016 John Racioppo

It's been a busy few weeks at Fault Line Theatre.

In addition to announcing our next show Bekah Brunstetter's The Oregon Trail, we've also been busy developing Michael Weller's latest script, Summer. Over the course of three days, under the direction of Aaron Rossini, we had the opportunity to work through the script with an incredible cast made up of Brooke Bloom, Tony Crane, Ali Rose Dachis, Drew Foster, and Bhavesh Patel. 

We love workshopping plays in progress. In a lot of ways, it's at the core of what we do as a company that focuses on the creation of new, socially relevant plays. It was a joy to spend the week buried in Michael's excellent new work!

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